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Description
Vaccines for prevention are a cost-effective
way to control or even eradicate selected infectious diseases.
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Special Characteristics
The classical approaches to vaccine
development were based on stimulating the body's immune system with attenuated living
pathogens (measles, polio, tuberculosis) or with killed infectious agents--a protein from
the pathogen and an adjuvant (diphtheria, tetanus, and whooping cough).
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Impact on Economy
Vaccine development makes an immediate
and critical contribution to the health of the U.S. population. Given the scientific basis
on which vaccines are developed, it also contributes to the goal of retaining U.S. world
leadership in science, mathematics, and engineering.
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Impact on Security
Vaccines also have significant
implications for national security by protecting U.S. soldiers, sailors, airmen, and
marines during peacekeeping and other missions, and by assuring the health of their
families while they are on deployment.
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Worldview
There is little commercial interest in the
development or production of vaccines for diseases that do not afflict developed countries
because of the inability of companies of to recoup their investment. Work in
this area is performed predominately by smaller biotechnology firms which form marketing
and distribution alliances with larger firms to support clinical trials. The NIH is the
world's largest funder of vaccine research, spending more than $300 million annually. The
Walter Reed Army Institute for Research is also a major research funder.
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Whats the use?
Under development. |
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Return to
Living Systems |
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